<p>Molly Levitt thought the only thing she would ever be was a teacher. But soon after taking charge of her first classroom in 2010, she became frustrated with the bureaucracy, the paperwork, the "structural things" that kept Levitt from her students.</p><p>So she started tinkering, building a website that lets teachers more easily monitor student progress, giving them more time for teaching.</p><p>Along the way, Levitt's effort morphed into a start-up business.</p><p>She joins a growing movement of young people many of them former teachers using technology to improve education, but from outside the classroom. They bring the wide-eyed enthusiasm they once had for teaching to writing code and designing Web pages.</p><p><a href="http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2013/08/05/teachers-turn-start-ups-change-education/rbZGS3ENJnvvQMvNVmxEkJ/story.html">Keep reading...</a></p>